The biggest caution I'd say is that 2 Neighbor swing has a higher chance of
too-much-clockwise.
I saw four dances in these suggestions with 40 beats of clockwise rotation
for at least one of the roles, which is right around the threshold where
people are getting dizzy but not quite noticing it.
I've got some in my box at home - I'll try and dig some out and forward
them. I second "Cheat Lake Gypsies" - that ones in my box and a definite
good dance!
Ron Blechner
On Sep 20, 2017 1:11 PM, "Isaac Banner via Callers" <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Hi Maia,
Here's one of my own -
*Grab Bag*
Contra/Dup Imp/Easy
A1
LLFB
(new) neighbor swing
A2
Ladies RS full hey
B1
Ladies pass right
Partner turn right shoulder, swing
B2
Circle left 3/4
(same) neighbor swing
Notes
I've found folks are also happy just skipping the right shoulder 'round /
gypsy in the B1 and going straight to the swing - either way works, your
mileage may vary.
On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 6:30 AM Angela DeCarlis via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> Howdy Maia!
>
> "Cheat Lake Gypsies" sprung to mind. I think I had it down as a Cary
> Ravitz dance, but on his website, it looks like it was done collaboratively
> by a group of folks at a dance weekend. Of course, the other annoying thing
> about this dance is that the title includes the G-word. I trust you'll
> handle that in some way that feels appropriate for you and your audience. :)
>
> Cheat Lake Gypsies
> Becket CCW
>
> A1 - Take hands in a ring and balance (4).
> - Ladies gypsy 1/2 (4).
> - Neighbors swing (8).
>
> A2 - Neighbors promenade around the full set (oval), counter-clockwise
> (6).
> - Ladies turn back to find a new neighbor (2).
> - (New) neighbors swing (8).
>
> B1 - Take hands with the full set and circle left (8).
> - Keep your neighbor and look for your partner to circle left 3/4 (8).
>
> B2 - Partners gypsy and swing (16).
>
>
> On Wed, Sep 20, 2017 at 8:07 AM, Linda Leslie via Callers <
> callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
>> Here are a few for you, Maia. Hope the workshop is a lot of fun!
>> Linda
>> ps: I have not seen your dance before…
>>
>> *Back from Vermont*
>> by David Zinkin
>> Contra/Improper/Int
>>
>> A1 -----------
>> Neighbor swing
>> Long lines forward and back
>> A2 -----------
>> Star right three-quarters to long waves (P right, gents out, ladies in)
>> Balance the long wave
>> Shadow allemande left once
>> B1 -----------
>> Partner Balance and Swing
>> B2 -----------
>> Circle left three-quarters
>> Swing same neighbor
>> At ends, don't cross! shadow!
>>
>> *Got Nice Neighbors*
>> by Billy Boyer
>> Contra/Becket-CW/Easy
>>
>> A1 -----------
>> Down the Hall four in line, turn as a couple, return
>> A2 -----------
>> Circle left 3/4
>> (8) Neighbor swing
>> B1 -----------
>> (8) Long lines, forward and back
>> (8) NEXT Neighbor swing*
>> B2 -----------
>> (8) Ladies allemande Right 1-1/2
>> (8) Partner swing
>>
>> *Naked in California*
>> by Nils Fredland
>> Contra/Improper/Int
>>
>> A1 -----------
>> Long lines forward and back
>> Neighbor swing
>> A2 -----------
>> Ladies allemande right One-Half
>> Partner allemande left three-quarters
>> Shadow allemande right once and a half (ladies out, gents face in)
>> B1 -----------
>> Long waves balance right, left, Slide right
>> Partner swing
>> B2 -----------
>> Circle left three-quarters
>> Same neighbor swing
>>
>> *Around the Sound*
>> by Cary Ravitz
>> Contra/Becket-CW/Adv
>>
>> A1 -----------
>> (var. on Give & Take): Long lines forward
>> Neighbor gypsy 1/2, gent back up with N to swing (ladies side)
>> A2 -----------
>> (8) 1/2 Hey, men passing left shoulders
>> Same Neighbor swing
>> B1 -----------
>> Long lines forward, P gypsy 1/2 (same effect as pass thru, TA)
>> (8) Star Right 3/4
>> NEW GENTS alle L once (ladies step L to meet P)
>>
>> B2 -----------
>> P B&S
>>
>> *CDS Reel*
>> by Ted Sannella
>> Contra/Improper/Easy
>>
>> A1 -----------
>> Neighbor swing
>> Long lines forward and back (end join in)
>> A2 -----------
>> Whole set circle left
>> Circle right
>> B1 -----------
>> Star left three-quarters
>> Gents turn back and swing partner
>> B2 -----------
>> Gents allemande left once and a half
>> Same neighbor Swing
>>
>>
>> On Sep 19, 2017, at 11:19 PM, Maia McCormick via Callers <
>> callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>
>> Hey folks,
>>
>> Looking for a dance with multiple swings with the same N, and also
>> preferably a P b&s, for a workshop I'm running on in-dance communication.
>> Anyone have one to recommend?
>>
>> On a similar note, this is the dance I tossed off to fill this need: does
>> it exist? If not, tentatively titling it "Good Fences".
>>
>> Improper
>> A1: long lines forward and back
>> (new) N swing
>> A2: ladies chain to P
>> half hey (ladies pass R)
>> B1: P b&s
>> B2: gents alle. L 1 1/2
>> (same) N swing
>> _______________________________________________
>> Callers mailing list
>> Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>> http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Callers mailing list
>> Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
>> http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
>>
>>
> _______________________________________________
> Callers mailing list
> Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
> http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
>
_______________________________________________
Callers mailing list
Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
Does anyone have an opinion about the use of the term “neighbor” and the term “opposite” in a Sicilian Circle?
“Neighbor” is more correct from a contra perspective, but “opposite" feels more correct to me from a square dance perspective.
thanks,
sue
Sue Hulsether
shulsether(a)mac.com
www.suehulsether.com
608-632-1267 Cell
608-629-6250 Home
P.O. Box 363
Viroqua, WI 54665
Hi,
I am preparing my program for my ECD group this Fall, Lord Greys ECD in
southern Ontario.
I was listening to Vol. #14 of CDSS ECD and loved The Waltz by Earl
Gaddis Under the Birches.
Wondering if a dance has been written for this gorgeous music.
Thanks for any help with this
Lorraine Sutton
Hello all,
I had a three hour drive to a gig the other day, and ruminated (again) on
grid contras. I think I've come up with a potentially dancable one. This is
advanced-dance stuff, not to be deployed lightly. And while I hope it won't
take 3 hours to digest this e-mail, I'm going to get into the weeds here.
Dive in only if you feel like bush-whacking with me. Here we go...
I'm going at it from a theoretical framework, from the ground up. This is
NOT how I'd teach it to dancers. If you want to start with the dance, jump
to down to *Contra Bias* in bold.
One drawback to grid contras attempts is what I'll call the "corner issue"
(discussed in more detail in footnote); where folks travel on diagonal
lines and get stuck in closed loop. Grid Squares can break the loop by
having figures and breaks that do different things. You're less likely to
get stuck in a corner when you progress in different ways at different
times through the dance.
But modern contra is defined by doing the same sequence every time through.
I personally enjoy, as a dancer and as a caller, when the caller can drop
out and let the dancers move to the music. (It's why I'm biased towards
contras.) So I want a sequence that doesn't trap dancers in a corner loop,
but is the same sequence every time. So I think we need to de-couple the up
and down the set progression from the lateral progression from set to set.
If you're a 1, you're going to stay a 1 until you reach the bottom of the
set, whether or not you reach the edge of the sets. The 2s will be 2s until
they reach the top of the hall. But if you were progressing to the right
across sets, when you reach the edge, you have to start progressing left;
or you'll run out of dancers. So some folks are progressing right, and some
left. That means that different sets will have different progressions.
Let's set up a dance hall, 8 sets wide, and 4 hands-four deep.
Stage is to the North (or you can think of N for Nutcase Caller...)
(*I've attempted to format this with a fixed-width font to keep the grid
clear. If it doesn't line up, your e-mail program may have changed the
formatting*).
N
1s(A1) 1s(B1) 1s(C1) 1s(D1) 1s(E1) 1s(F1) 1s(G1) 1s(H1)
2s(a1) 2s(b1) 2s(c1) 2s(d1) 2s(e1) 2s(f1) 2s(g1) 2s(h1)
1s(A2) 1s(B2) 1s(C2) 1s(D2) 1s(E2) 1s(F2) 1s(G2) 1s(H2)
2s(a2) 2s(b2) 2s(c2) 2s(D2) 2s(e2) 2s(f2) 2s(g2) 2s(h2)
W E
1s(A3) 1s(B3) 1s(C3) 1s(D3) 1s(E3) 1s(F3) 1s(G3) 1s(H3)
2s(a3) 2s(b3) 2s(c3) 2s(D3) 2s(e3) 2s(f3) 2s(g3) 2s(h3)
1s(A4) 1s(B4) 1s(C4) 1s(D4) 1s(E4) 1s(F4) 1s(G4) 1s(H4)
2s(a4) 2s(b4) 2s(c4) 2s(D4) 2s(e4) 2s(f4) 2s(g4) 2s(h4)
S
1s are going progressing south. 2s are progressing north.
Sets A, C, E, and G will all be right-progressing. Sets B, D, F, H, will be
left-progressing. It doesn't matter if the west-most set is right or left,
but it does need to alternate.
Right/left progressing here means relative to the direction they're facing.
Left-progressing D set has 1s(D) progressing south and east; and 2s(d)
progressing north and west.
Right-progressing E set has 1s(E) progressing south and west; and 2s(e)
progressing north and east.
When a couple reaches the edge of the set, (which westward progressing
1s(As) will do after one time through; as will eastward 1s(Hs)) we need
them to come back in the set still the same 1s or 2s, but now going the
other way laterally (east/left for the initial As; west/right for the
initial Hs).
Because I don't want to have folks wait out on the sides as well as the top
and bottom; I'm going to go for a double lateral progression.
So we've set up requirements, for progression and consistent moves; which
means we have to have moves that put different people in different places;
something like "1s half figure 8", but you need to be able to differentiate
the dancers in the rightward/leftward sets; and it shouldn't be something
that is called for only half of the sets (although, like 1/2 figure 8, or
gents allemande left, I do consider having half the dancers move okay,
especially if we can keep it balanced over the course of the dance). The
solution that occurred to me while driving on highway 89 was corners. I'd
call them 1st and 2nd corners, but those have specific meaning to English
Country dancers; so I'm going to call it Bias Corners and Other Corners;
where Bias is from the sewing and/or cooking sense, and refers to "on the
diagonal".
If you're a leftward progressing couple, you're facing another leftward
progressing couple. The Bias Corners are the folks on the left of each
couple (i.e. the gents role). The Other Corners for left-ward progressing
couples are the folks on the right (i.e. the ladies role).
For rightward progressing couple, the Bias Corners are the folks on the
right of each couple (ladies role), and the Other Corners are the folks on
the left (gents role).
The bias pair for left/right progressing couple is not the left/right
diagonal; it's the opposite diagonal; i.e. the left progressing bias couple
is the right diagonal couple.
*Bias Contra*
Grid contra of duple improper
Alternating leftward and rightward progressing sets.
Single vertical progression, double lateral progression.
Any number of equal-length* sets, ideally 3 or more.
*A1*
(4) Balance the ring of four
(4) Bias Corners trade places, passing by left shoulder;
all face neighbor across the set
(8) Half hey across the sets; passing four people
(initial neighbor right, then left N2, right N3, left N4, all will be
opposite role dancers)
*A2*
With Partner and New Neighbor (#5)
(4) Balance the ring of four
(12) Swing Neighbor on the top or bottom, end facing up or down the set,
towards your partner
*B1*
(4) Balance the Ring of four
(12) Partner swing on the side of the set, end facing across at the
neighbor you just swing
*B2*
(4) Balance the Ring of four
(4) Other Corners trade places, passing by left shoulders
(4) Right hand to partner, balance
(4) Pull by partner right, current neighbor left
*Notes:*
Bias Corners:
In a left progressing set, this is the gents (the folks on the left);
for a right progressing set, this is the ladies (the folks on the right).
Other Corners:
In a left progressing set, this is the ladies (the folks on the right);
for a right progressing set, this is the gents (the folks on the left).
Edge effects:
This is a double lateral progression. When you reach the edge of the sets,
you pass your partner by the left as one of the passes in your hey (2nd or
4th) and trade lines that you're heying across the set in. You've just
swapped left/right progressing
End effects:
When you run out of couples top or bottom, you wait out one time. 1s become
2s, and vice versa. Your left/right progression status DOES NOT change, but
the wall (East/West) that you're laterally progressing towards DOES change,
because you've turned around.
*: Equal Length:
It's not terrible if the sets aren't completely even. If you had some
extra, they could be a partial across the bottom (each X is a hands four):
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX
XXXXX
But they should all be contiguous, not
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXX
XX X X X
which would create awkward mini-loops in the dangling sets.
To look at where folks end up after one time through the dance, lets go
back to our grid, with A, C, E, G our rightward sets:
N
R L R L R L R L
1s(A1) 1s(B1) 1s(C1) 1s(D1) 1s(E1) 1s(F1) 1s(G1) 1s(H1)
2s(a1) 2s(b1) 2s(c1) 2s(d1) 2s(e1) 2s(f1) 2s(g1) 2s(h1)
1s(A2) 1s(B2) 1s(C2) 1s(D2) 1s(E2) 1s(F2) 1s(G2) 1s(H2)
2s(a2) 2s(b2) 2s(c2) 2s(D2) 2s(e2) 2s(f2) 2s(g2) 2s(h2)
W E
1s(A3) 1s(B3) 1s(C3) 1s(D3) 1s(E3) 1s(F3) 1s(G3) 1s(H3)
2s(a3) 2s(b3) 2s(c3) 2s(D3) 2s(e3) 2s(f3) 2s(g3) 2s(h3)
1s(A4) 1s(B4) 1s(C4) 1s(D4) 1s(E4) 1s(F4) 1s(G4) 1s(H4)
2s(a4) 2s(b4) 2s(c4) 2s(D4) 2s(e4) 2s(f4) 2s(g4) 2s(h4)
S
After one time through the dance:
N
R L R L R L R L
2s(b1) 2s(d1) 2s(a1) 2s(f1) 2s(c1) 2s(h1) 2s(e1) 2s(g1) - OUT
1s(C1) 1s(A1) 1s(E1) 1s(B1) 1s(G1) 1s(D1) 1s(H1) 1s(F1)
2s(b2) 2s(d2) 2s(a2) 2s(f2) 2s(c2) 2s(h2) 2s(e2) 2s(g2)
1s(C2) 1s(A2) 1s(E2) 1s(B2) 1s(G2) 1s(D2) 1s(H2) 1s(F2)
2s(b3) 2s(d3) 2s(a3) 2s(f3) 2s(c3) 2s(h3) 2s(e3) 2s(g3)
W E
1s(C3) 1s(A3) 1s(E3) 1s(B3) 1s(G3) 1s(D3) 1s(H3) 1s(F3)
2s(b4) 2s(d4) 2s(a4) 2s(f4) 2s(c4) 2s(h4) 2s(e4) 2s(g4)
1s(C4) 1s(A4) 1s(E4) 1s(B4) 1s(G4) 1s(D4) 1s(H4) 1s(F4) - OUT
S
As for actually teaching it; the criteria I would want before trying:
- You need dancers that want to stretch their brain. No sense calling
this for caller ego, it has to be something folks are excited to try.
- You need enough dancers to make enough sets to make it interesting. It
would work with 2 or 3 sets (or even technically 1 set, although why bother
then)
- The room should have visible cues to help anchor dancers (like the
stage, quilt, exits, and bleachers at Flurry; but even those might not be
noticeable enough)
- You need enough space to enable swinging on the side of the set, and
top/bottom of the set of four
I'd get the dancers lined up in regular sets. Then have them take wide
lines between the sets to make sure they're lined up that way too. Then
back to long lines in their contra sets, and have the sets count off;
left-right-left-etc to identify their initial lateral progression
direction. I'd mention it's a double lateral progression; and that you
switch lateral progression direction at the edges; and up/down the set only
at the top and bottom.
I'd explain Bias Corners. Do the first move, start the half hey and mention
that you're passing 4 people of the opposite role. If you reach the end,
pass your partner as one of your four and trade lines that you're heying in.
When you've just come in off the ends, or around the edges; trust the folks
coming at you with regards to who is Bias/Other corners.
Mentioning small swing would be critical, since you'll need to end tight
enough that you can go from a swing to a ring balance.
And I think it's worth walking twice, just so that people don't have to go
back ;-)
I welcome feedback on the whole thing; but also see this mostly as a
theoretical exercise about what a grid contra could be. The conditions to
actually call it seem less common than a solar eclipse; and there's not a
great way to practice it ahead of time. But if someone wants to get a
couple hundred people together, I'd be game to give it a go.
Thanks for even reading this far.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
*Footnote:*
*Corner Issue (or why I de-coupled the progression directions):*
Standard contra has you progress up and down the line, turning around when
you reach an end. If everyone in a grid contra were to progress to the
right one set while also progressing up and down, you're progressing on a
diagonal. When you reach the edge of the set; you have to swap number, or
the grid runs out of dancers. One you pop out of the bottom as 1s in a
regular contra, you have to come back as a 2s to replace the folks that
would normally have danced with you and moved past you. Same thing on the
edges for and all-same lateral progression grid contra.
In a case where you have 8 sets A-H, 4 hands four deep:
1s(A1) 1s(B1) 1s(C1) 1s(D1) 1s(E1) 1s(F1) 1s(G1) 1s(H1)
2s(a1) 2s(b1) 2s(c1) 2s(d1) 2s(e1) 2s(f1) 2s(g1) 2s(h1)
1s(A2) 1s(B2) 1s(C2) 1s(D2) 1s(E2) 1s(F2) 1s(G2) 1s(H2)
2s(a2) 2s(b2) 2s(c2) 2s(D2) 2s(e2) 2s(f2) 2s(g2) 2s(h2)
1s(A3) 1s(B3) 1s(C3) 1s(D3) 1s(E3) 1s(F3) 1s(G3) 1s(H3)
2s(a3) 2s(b3) 2s(c3) 2s(D3) 2s(e3) 2s(f3) 2s(g3) 2s(h3)
1s(A4) 1s(B4) 1s(C4) 1s(D4) 1s(E4) 1s(F4) 1s(G4) 1s(H4)
2s(a5) 2s(b4) 2s(c4) 2s(D4) 2s(e4) 2s(f4) 2s(g4) 2s(h4)
If the progression for a grid contra were:
1s down the set 1 couple, and right one set
2s up the set 1 couple, and right one set
Then when couple 1s(A1) finished one time through the dance, they'd come
back in as the 2s(a1) couple. The initial 2s(a1) will come in as 1s(A1);
and they'd never get to dance with anyone else.
The B1 couples would only get dance with 2 other couples. C1 with 3. D1
with four, and which point the length and width tie for influence. But
everyone from D1 to A4 is stuck in their corner, travelling back and forth
on a diagonal line.
If all the 1s and 2s progress in different directions, i.e. 1s down and
right, 2s down and left; then you're shifting the whole dance hall; i.e.
folks are shifting into sets to the right of A, and leaving set H.
Other progression attempts, say 1s down and right 2; 2s up and right 2;
just draw different diagonal lines through the matrix.
You could try to set up a diamond set, but that's logistically a pain, and
you'd still only be travelling in one set, it would just be on a diagonal
compared to regular progression.
You could make a single-lateral progression grid contra, and have folks
wait out at the sides. The waiting out folks could swap with another
waiting out couple to switch the diagonal line that they were bouncing
around in. But it'd either be chaotic with random swapping (and who would
want to go to the "bad" corner and get stuck) or systematic - everyone
shuffles two places along; but then folks have to run from top to bottom;
and grid contras are designed for large numbers of dancers.
The alternating lateral progression sets of *Bias Contra* creates (in my
mind) two sub-lattices of contra sets, who's boundary conditions for
propagating units (i.e. couples) feed into each other. But I don't know
that thinking of it that way would make sense to anyone besides a
physicist.
--
Luke Donforth
Luke.Donforth(a)gmail.com <Luke.Donev(a)gmail.com>
Here in Montana, I routinely travel 100-300 miles (one way!) to call
dances. I, too, leave early and use my driving time as an opportunity to
practice calling. I arrange my program ahead of time, put on some music
as I travel and call. Going over the dances while I drive gives me time
to practice and also to realize when consecutive dances are too similar.
I feel more prepared for these distant dances than I do for the local
ones, due to the practice.
Bev Young
Thanks for the tip!
On Sep 16, 2017 8:28 PM, "Martha Wild" <mawild(a)sbcglobal.net> wrote:
If you have to travel a long distance, LEAVE EARLY. So many things can go
wrong with traffic etc. on the way to a dance. Give yourself time to get
there without stressing and arriving at the last minute (or after the last
minute).
Martha
> On Sep 16, 2017, at 6:01 AM, Mary Collins via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>
> I know many of us travel some distance to call a dance, and some of us
have only a few miles to go to call. I'm curious in each situation, how
your pre-dance day is spent. What helps and what has hindered your calling
might be good too.
>
> Thanks in advance for your input.
>
> Mary Collins
> _______________________________________________
> Callers mailing list
> Callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net
> http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
I know many of us travel some distance to call a dance, and some of us have
only a few miles to go to call. I'm curious in each situation, how your
pre-dance day is spent. What helps and what has hindered your calling might
be good too.
Thanks in advance for your input.
Mary Collins
He- Ahem- AHOY, Shared Weight?
Did you know that September 19 is International Talk Like a Pirate Day?
Me neither, but the dance I'm calling tonight was sure to let me know! I
know there are a bunch of Pirate-themed dances out there (one that I heard
Maggie Jo Saylor called years ago springs to mind, with two consecutive
wave balances). Send along some of your favorites, maybe others with gigs
this weekend will find they come in handy!
Thanks!
Angela
www.angeladecarlis.com
Hi, Angela,
I wrote two dances called "All Hands on Deck" and "Hold Fast." They both
sort of combine "Fast Hands" by Diane Silver and "A Pirate's Life for Me"
by Nathaniel Jack.
See www.duganmurphy.com/dances-i-wrote
Two of my other titles, "Bold Coast" and "Cutler Coast" sound a little
piratelike, though they actually refer to a state park in Cutler, Maine.
They are written out on the same web page linked above.
Dugan Murphy
Portland, Maine
dugan at duganmurphy.com <dugan(a)duganmurphy.com>
www.DuganMurphy.comwww.PortlandIntownContraDance.comwww.NufSed.consulting
> Date: Sat, 16 Sep 2017 10:21:38 -0400
> From: Angela DeCarlis <aedecarlis(a)gmail.com>
> To: callers <callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net>
> Subject: [Callers] Pirate Themed Dances!
>
> He- Ahem- AHOY, Shared Weight?
>
> Did you know that September 19 is International Talk Like a Pirate Day?
>
> Me neither, but the dance I'm calling tonight was sure to let me know! I
> know there are a bunch of Pirate-themed dances out there (one that I heard
> Maggie Jo Saylor called years ago springs to mind, with two consecutive
> wave balances). Send along some of your favorites, maybe others with gigs
> this weekend will find they come in handy!
>
> Thanks!
> Angela
>
> www.angeladecarlis.com
>
Hi callers,
I've been looking for a funky dance, a variation on Chorus Jig for 4
couples, alternating, everybody turns contra corners. Does anyone know who
to thank for it?
(I remember dancing it at one of the Monte Toyon camps (Spring Fever or
Queer Contra Camp) but I can't remember which! For bonus points, I'd love
to figure out whom I learned it from.)
The dance goes like this:
A1: top couple down the outside and back
B1: top couple down the middle and back, cast off with 2s
C: all turn contra corners in the middle
(All turn partner right 3/4, 1st corner left 1, parter right 1/2, 2nd
corner left 1.
It looks like a wave of 8 down the middle.)
B2: all balance and swing partner; end swing facing up (?)
(? = Do you alternate facing up/down?)
Then, every other time, alternate: the bottom couple goes up the set and
casts off with the 3s. So the 1s and 2s just change places with each other,
and the 3s and 4s change places with each other, and everyone has a turn.
Thanks,
Yoyo Zhou